Where Angels Fear to Tread eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Where Angels Fear to Tread.

Where Angels Fear to Tread eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Where Angels Fear to Tread.

Miss Abbott did not know of the Tombola.  His speech terrified her.  She felt those subtle restrictions which come upon us in fatigue.  Had she slept well she would have greeted him as soon as she saw him.  Now it was impossible.  He had got into another world.

She watched his smoke-ring.  The air had carried it slowly away from him, and brought it out intact upon the landing.

“Two hundred and five—­eighty-two.  In any case I shall put them on Bari, not on Florence.  I cannot tell you why; I have a feeling this week for Bari.”  Again she tried to speak.  But the ring mesmerized her.  It had become vast and elliptical, and floated in at the reception-room door.

“Ah! you don’t care if you get the profits.  You won’t even say ‘Thank you, Gino.’  Say it, or I’ll drop hot, red-hot ashes on you.  ‘Thank you, Gino—­’”

The ring had extended its pale blue coils towards her.  She lost self-control.  It enveloped her.  As if it was a breath from the pit, she screamed.

There he was, wanting to know what had frightened her, how she had got here, why she had never spoken.  He made her sit down.  He brought her wine, which she refused.  She had not one word to say to him.

“What is it?” he repeated.  “What has frightened you?”

He, too, was frightened, and perspiration came starting through the tan.  For it is a serious thing to have been watched.  We all radiate something curiously intimate when we believe ourselves to be alone.

“Business—­” she said at last.

“Business with me?”

“Most important business.”  She was lying, white and limp, in the dusty chair.

“Before business you must get well; this is the best wine.”

She refused it feebly.  He poured out a glass.  She drank it.  As she did so she became self-conscious.  However important the business, it was not proper of her to have called on him, or to accept his hospitality.

“Perhaps you are engaged,” she said.  “And as I am not very well—­”

“You are not well enough to go back.  And I am not engaged.”

She looked nervously at the other room.

“Ah, now I understand,” he exclaimed.  “Now I see what frightened you.  But why did you never speak?” And taking her into the room where he lived, he pointed to—­the baby.

She had thought so much about this baby, of its welfare, its soul, its morals, its probable defects.  But, like most unmarried people, she had only thought of it as a word—­just as the healthy man only thinks of the word death, not of death itself.  The real thing, lying asleep on a dirty rug, disconcerted her.  It did not stand for a principle any longer.  It was so much flesh and blood, so many inches and ounces of life—­a glorious, unquestionable fact, which a man and another woman had given to the world.  You could talk to it; in time it would answer you; in time it would not answer you unless

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Where Angels Fear to Tread from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.